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Mortgage Rates Up Slightly From Long-Term Lows

Mortgage rates rose moderately today as weekend news headlines suggested some measure of de-escalation of nuclear tensions between the US and North Korea.  To be sure, the news wasn’t resoundingly conciliatory, but investors took solace in it nonetheless.

In general, when headlines suggest the world is less likely to end by Monday, investors will be slightly more risk tolerant.  One expression of risk tolerant trading in financial markets is to favor something like stocks as opposed to bonds.  If there is net selling pressure on bonds, it creates net upward pressure on interest rates.  This was the case this morning.

In the afternoon, comments from NY Fed President Dudley (one of the 3 most important voices at the Fed) kept pressure on rates, which seemed willing to recover in the late morning hours.  Dudley affirmed investors’ assumptions about upcoming Fed policy changes.  Because these changes are net-negative for bond markets, they put upward pressure on rates.  Because investors are quite confident in those assumptions, the upward pressure was very small in the bigger picture.  Still, it was enough to prevent most mortgage lenders from considering offering improved rate sheets before the end of the day.

Loan Originator Perspective

New day/week, same deal with bond markets today, as they were virtually unchanged from Friday’s levels.  It’s going to take something far more substantial than UN resolutions, threatening tweets, or tepid economic data to motivate rates here.  Not sure what that will be, or when, but for now, we’re on hold.  If you’re floating, have realistic expectations, best case scenario, your lender credit might improve slightly from day to day.  -Ted Rood, Senior Originator

Today’s Most Prevalent Rates

Ongoing Lock/Float Considerations

  Source: www.mortgagenewsdaily.com

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